Dump and Run is an innovative program
which collects students’ unwanted items at the end of the school year and
resells them the next fall at a heavily discounted price. The proceeds
from the sale are then donated to a charity. Dump and Run has previously
been run at the University of Richmond, the results
were more than impressive. A 15 foot long truck was filled 8 times with
the items collected and $1200 was raised! This year the CU Greens will
be helping a local charity, the Harlem Restoration Project. Everybody
wins: the environment, the students, and the charity.

Volunteering

As a Dump & Run volunteer, you can choose the level of involvement
that you have time for. In the spring volunteers will be needed to
empty collection sites, sort donated items, and collect items on College
Walk. Some volunteers will also be needed to stay after the semester
is over to transfer items to the summer storage space (housing provided).
Volunteers will also be needed in the fall to sell items to students.
Volunteers will be compensated with $5 worth of items collected for every
hour worked. Need a new couch, lamp, wardrobe or computer?

TOP TEN REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD VOLUNTEER…

10. It’s a great way to help out a local charity like the Harlem
Restoration Project.

9. You need a good excuse to hang out in the city for a few days
before heading home or off to your summer internship

8. As a volunteer, you will be compensated for each hour you help
us out with $5 worth of goods from the sale

7. It’s a great way to meet like-minded folks who care about environmental
issues

6. FREE T-SHIRT! ‘Nuff said

5. Now you will have a reason to hang out in John Jay to stalk
that hot freshman you’ve got a crush on

4. Snood is getting old and you need new (and productive!) methods of
procrastinating.

3. You slept through Columbia Community Outreach ("You want me to be
there at WHAT TIME on Saturday?!?") and you’re looking for a way to ease
that guilt and volunteer for something else before the semester ends.

2. You get to hang out with the oh-so-cool members of the Columbia Greens.